A warning to new clay bar users – When used with the improper technique, it can damage your paint/clearcoat.
Here’s the story:
I picked up a spoiler from a 97-98 Saturn at the junkyard to practice my rock chip repair technique. I am going on the assumption that the fully cured factory paint surrounding the chip is substantially harder than a freshly repaired area. So I fill the chip with paint, and let it dry, and dab a drop of clear on top of that and let it dry. After a few hours I come back and clay bar the spot quite vigorously to try and level the clear dab flush with the surrounding paint. I am weary about using sandpaper to level a repair spot when the surrounding clear is already thin from the factory. After claying this very small area hard and fast for 10-15min, the clear dab is about level with the surrounding paint, and almost invisible to my discerning eye. So my theory is proven. The problem is when I then hit it with some 91% IPA, I got paint on my paper towel, indicating that I had clayed off the clear coat!
I think the problem is this: I used old clay that I have used on a few vehicles, so the clay probably had a lot of particulates suspended in it, and then, with my aggressive rubbing, the clay got paper thin to the point where my finger broke through.
I think that the combination of thinning clay and already suspended solids in the clay made it act like a piece of sandpaper, taking the clear off.
So, moral of the story: Use fresh clay on a vehicle you care about!
Here’s the story:
I picked up a spoiler from a 97-98 Saturn at the junkyard to practice my rock chip repair technique. I am going on the assumption that the fully cured factory paint surrounding the chip is substantially harder than a freshly repaired area. So I fill the chip with paint, and let it dry, and dab a drop of clear on top of that and let it dry. After a few hours I come back and clay bar the spot quite vigorously to try and level the clear dab flush with the surrounding paint. I am weary about using sandpaper to level a repair spot when the surrounding clear is already thin from the factory. After claying this very small area hard and fast for 10-15min, the clear dab is about level with the surrounding paint, and almost invisible to my discerning eye. So my theory is proven. The problem is when I then hit it with some 91% IPA, I got paint on my paper towel, indicating that I had clayed off the clear coat!
I think the problem is this: I used old clay that I have used on a few vehicles, so the clay probably had a lot of particulates suspended in it, and then, with my aggressive rubbing, the clay got paper thin to the point where my finger broke through.
I think that the combination of thinning clay and already suspended solids in the clay made it act like a piece of sandpaper, taking the clear off.
So, moral of the story: Use fresh clay on a vehicle you care about!
Comment